
Why should I pay for something that should be free? Why is everyone so willing and ready to pay. I already pay 15 a month and for that I should be getting extra slots, priority queue, etc. Instead you are proposing I pay more for something I should already have.
Sounds like a fair price. Which means we will probably never get to pay it. This is less than the cost of a cup of coffee. The bean counters will never let this happen this cheap.
See how I worked in bean counters and coffee in one argument?
Why should I pay for something that should be free? Why is everyone so willing and ready to pay. I already pay 15 a month and for that I should be getting extra slots, priority queue, etc. Instead you are proposing I pay more for something I should already have.
Sallington wrote: »Anything useful that players are wanting added into the game all fall under the category of "Yer ruinin my 'mersion!"
That's a lot of work for a pretty simple request. I don't think adding fluff to the request makes it more conniving. They know we want to be able to buy extra chatacter slots.
The price is a bit low though. I would say more in the 1000 Crown range. What you're purposing is less than the price of a costume.
@Gidorick I added this in the analysis to help clarify with a visual representation. Will also add it to the original post.
Sallington wrote: »Anything useful that players are wanting added into the game all fall under the category of "Yer ruinin my 'mersion!"
VictoriaRachel wrote: »Ah, a graph.
One that is based on an unrepresentative incredibly small sample using a biased poll.
Must be 'analysis'.
*sigh*
Also if those people are all subscribers there is no additional profit at all as all extra slots can be bought with the crowns they are already receiving. You want to encourage people to spend more then they already do not just hand it out like candy.
You could have just said "Id Pay X crowns for an extra chatacter slot!" and we would have had a conversation on that.
...VictoriaRachel wrote: »Ah, a graph.
One that is based on an unrepresentative incredibly small sample using a biased poll.
Must be 'analysis'.
*sigh*
Also if those people are all subscribers there is no additional profit at all as all extra slots can be bought with the crowns they are already receiving. You want to encourage people to spend more then they already do not just hand it out like candy.
How are the polls biased? If you have a better poll then by all means let's see it. As for sample size in survey data, I'm working on locating a method for determining confidence and p-value since that is a statistical method I've never explored I don't have an answer I am satisfied with yet. obviously as with any sampling the larger your sample the more accurately it represents the population.
So far I have located a table that indicates a sample size of 110 is adequate to represent a population of 1,000,000 with 90% confidence. If you agree with the chart then a sample of 102 and a sample of 164 may in fact be adequate sample sizes.
The chart was not sourced and frankly I'm not satisfied with the numbers from the chart (Which may be perfectly accurate). I'm still looking for the actual formula which would determine sample size in this instance (without knowing the population size).
For now I will say, if you can get a better survey with a larger sample then by all means let's have it. In the mean time I will continue researching this aspect until I can say further. In any case they are descriptive in nature at the very least and as such they still provide useful information.
Naivefanboi wrote: »Well if come console launch we have only 3 slots and the rrst in crown store, we know who to thank. xD
Sallington wrote: »Anything useful that players are wanting added into the game all fall under the category of "Yer ruinin my 'mersion!"
...VictoriaRachel wrote: »Ah, a graph.
One that is based on an unrepresentative incredibly small sample using a biased poll.
Must be 'analysis'.
*sigh*
Also if those people are all subscribers there is no additional profit at all as all extra slots can be bought with the crowns they are already receiving. You want to encourage people to spend more then they already do not just hand it out like candy.
How are the polls biased? If you have a better poll then by all means let's see it. As for sample size in survey data, I'm working on locating a method for determining confidence and p-value since that is a statistical method I've never explored I don't have an answer I am satisfied with yet. obviously as with any sampling the larger your sample the more accurately it represents the population.
So far I have located a table that indicates a sample size of 110 is adequate to represent a population of 1,000,000 with 90% confidence. If you agree with the chart then a sample of 102 and a sample of 164 may in fact be adequate sample sizes.
The chart was not sourced and frankly I'm not satisfied with the numbers from the chart (Which may be perfectly accurate). I'm still looking for the actual formula which would determine sample size in this instance (without knowing the population size).
For now I will say, if you can get a better survey with a larger sample then by all means let's have it. In the mean time I will continue researching this aspect until I can say further. In any case they are descriptive in nature at the very least and as such they still provide useful information.
The polls are biased, because there is basically 1 option for no, and several for yes. You need a very complex formula to do the analysis of polls that have so many choices to come up with the overall results of the range of what could be earned by ever active player. You also need more control of your sample if you have 2 samples that are directly related. Like, are you sure that everyone that voted in one poll, voted in the second poll. You're creating more variables when you don't have that control.
You also ignore the fact that a subscriber would get 1,500 crowns each month they have subscribed. That means they have the option to buy 3 character slots in a month with their stipend. Which does not net ZOS anymore than what they are already selling the subscriber.
90% confidence has a large gap for error also, you should be aiming for 95% if not 99%. You should also be seeing that the ideal price and the average earning per player would be of a range, not just the middle. Averages are often something taken from known numbers, probability is what you get from unknown numbers.
If you wanted to get a decent look of what 100,000 people wanted to know with a 95% confidence level, with a 5% margin of error, you would need to poll 383 people.
That's a lot of work for a pretty simple request. I don't think adding fluff to the request makes it more conniving. They know we want to be able to buy extra chatacter slots.
The price is a bit low though. I would say more in the 1000 Crown range. What you're purposing is less than the price of a costume.
...VictoriaRachel wrote: »Ah, a graph.
One that is based on an unrepresentative incredibly small sample using a biased poll.
Must be 'analysis'.
*sigh*
Also if those people are all subscribers there is no additional profit at all as all extra slots can be bought with the crowns they are already receiving. You want to encourage people to spend more then they already do not just hand it out like candy.
How are the polls biased? If you have a better poll then by all means let's see it. As for sample size in survey data, I'm working on locating a method for determining confidence and p-value since that is a statistical method I've never explored I don't have an answer I am satisfied with yet. obviously as with any sampling the larger your sample the more accurately it represents the population.
So far I have located a table that indicates a sample size of 110 is adequate to represent a population of 1,000,000 with 90% confidence. If you agree with the chart then a sample of 102 and a sample of 164 may in fact be adequate sample sizes.
The chart was not sourced and frankly I'm not satisfied with the numbers from the chart (Which may be perfectly accurate). I'm still looking for the actual formula which would determine sample size in this instance (without knowing the population size).
For now I will say, if you can get a better survey with a larger sample then by all means let's have it. In the mean time I will continue researching this aspect until I can say further. In any case they are descriptive in nature at the very least and as such they still provide useful information.
The polls are biased, because there is basically 1 option for no, and several for yes. You need a very complex formula to do the analysis of polls that have so many choices to come up with the overall results of the range of what could be earned by ever active player. You also need more control of your sample if you have 2 samples that are directly related. Like, are you sure that everyone that voted in one poll, voted in the second poll. You're creating more variables when you don't have that control.
You also ignore the fact that a subscriber would get 1,500 crowns each month they have subscribed. That means they have the option to buy 3 character slots in a month with their stipend. Which does not net ZOS anymore than what they are already selling the subscriber.
90% confidence has a large gap for error also, you should be aiming for 95% if not 99%. You should also be seeing that the ideal price and the average earning per player would be of a range, not just the middle. Averages are often something taken from known numbers, probability is what you get from unknown numbers.
If you wanted to get a decent look of what 100,000 people wanted to know with a 95% confidence level, with a 5% margin of error, you would need to poll 383 people.
I won't bother going line for line here but there are no yes and know answers within the surveys. They all represent positive values within a numeric range. Within the selections are valid selections for all possible positive numeric values, even ridiculously high values. Reference subscribers, that is a valid point (kind of) subscribers do get crowns and they may spend the crowns from the subscription on slots. However they may already be purchasing other things with their crowns and some players may get a subscription simply because they will buy slots. The fact remains though that no matter how the players got the crowns providing an additional purchase will result in more crowns being spent. Every character slot sold is actually an additional sale that would not have occurred had there not been the option to purchase character slots.
90% is a pretty big gap, in my research field (which doesn't use surveys) we shoot for 95% confidence. Biomedical research shoots for 99.99% confidence. However, there are other scientific (and non-scientific) research fields which accept 90% confidence as significant. These topics are published in respectable peer reviewed literature with only 90% confidenc. Look at the appendix in any statistics book they all list values to 90% and lower in some. The reason is because this value can provide useful information and researchers and staticians know that 90% is 90% and it means exactly that. Even a lay person understands when someone says that the represented results have a 90% chance of being statistically significant.
Reference your 95% confidence numbers instead of hiding the information and using a lower count than what I used (1,000,000) be more productive and provide the numbers for the same 1,000,000...it's only 4xx in the lower 400's and for conservative analysis whatever the benchmark used should be above the actual player count to have at least the desired level of confidence. It really sounds like you're good at Google and undergrad statistics but need more education .
Finally as always if you have a better data set and a bigger sample lay it on us. I put out what I have and detailed the analysis and the data source I'm not saying it's perfect. People can look at what I did and make their own interpretations.
It's easy to critique others but until you or someone else produces something better then this is still the best information we have if you don't agree go make your own surveys and post your results.
Sallington wrote: »Anything useful that players are wanting added into the game all fall under the category of "Yer ruinin my 'mersion!"
...VictoriaRachel wrote: »Ah, a graph.
One that is based on an unrepresentative incredibly small sample using a biased poll.
Must be 'analysis'.
*sigh*
Also if those people are all subscribers there is no additional profit at all as all extra slots can be bought with the crowns they are already receiving. You want to encourage people to spend more then they already do not just hand it out like candy.
How are the polls biased? If you have a better poll then by all means let's see it. As for sample size in survey data, I'm working on locating a method for determining confidence and p-value since that is a statistical method I've never explored I don't have an answer I am satisfied with yet. obviously as with any sampling the larger your sample the more accurately it represents the population.
So far I have located a table that indicates a sample size of 110 is adequate to represent a population of 1,000,000 with 90% confidence. If you agree with the chart then a sample of 102 and a sample of 164 may in fact be adequate sample sizes.
The chart was not sourced and frankly I'm not satisfied with the numbers from the chart (Which may be perfectly accurate). I'm still looking for the actual formula which would determine sample size in this instance (without knowing the population size).
For now I will say, if you can get a better survey with a larger sample then by all means let's have it. In the mean time I will continue researching this aspect until I can say further. In any case they are descriptive in nature at the very least and as such they still provide useful information.
The polls are biased, because there is basically 1 option for no, and several for yes. You need a very complex formula to do the analysis of polls that have so many choices to come up with the overall results of the range of what could be earned by ever active player. You also need more control of your sample if you have 2 samples that are directly related. Like, are you sure that everyone that voted in one poll, voted in the second poll. You're creating more variables when you don't have that control.
You also ignore the fact that a subscriber would get 1,500 crowns each month they have subscribed. That means they have the option to buy 3 character slots in a month with their stipend. Which does not net ZOS anymore than what they are already selling the subscriber.
90% confidence has a large gap for error also, you should be aiming for 95% if not 99%. You should also be seeing that the ideal price and the average earning per player would be of a range, not just the middle. Averages are often something taken from known numbers, probability is what you get from unknown numbers.
If you wanted to get a decent look of what 100,000 people wanted to know with a 95% confidence level, with a 5% margin of error, you would need to poll 383 people.
I won't bother going line for line here but there are no yes and know answers within the surveys. They all represent positive values within a numeric range. Within the selections are valid selections for all possible positive numeric values, even ridiculously high values. Reference subscribers, that is a valid point (kind of) subscribers do get crowns and they may spend the crowns from the subscription on slots. However they may already be purchasing other things with their crowns and some players may get a subscription simply because they will buy slots. The fact remains though that no matter how the players got the crowns providing an additional purchase will result in more crowns being spent. Every character slot sold is actually an additional sale that would not have occurred had there not been the option to purchase character slots.
90% is a pretty big gap, in my research field (which doesn't use surveys) we shoot for 95% confidence. Biomedical research shoots for 99.99% confidence. However, there are other scientific (and non-scientific) research fields which accept 90% confidence as significant. These topics are published in respectable peer reviewed literature with only 90% confidenc. Look at the appendix in any statistics book they all list values to 90% and lower in some. The reason is because this value can provide useful information and researchers and staticians know that 90% is 90% and it means exactly that. Even a lay person understands when someone says that the represented results have a 90% chance of being statistically significant.
Reference your 95% confidence numbers instead of hiding the information and using a lower count than what I used (1,000,000) be more productive and provide the numbers for the same 1,000,000...it's only 4xx in the lower 400's and for conservative analysis whatever the benchmark used should be above the actual player count to have at least the desired level of confidence. It really sounds like you're good at Google and undergrad statistics but need more education .
Finally as always if you have a better data set and a bigger sample lay it on us. I put out what I have and detailed the analysis and the data source I'm not saying it's perfect. People can look at what I did and make their own interpretations.
It's easy to critique others but until you or someone else produces something better then this is still the best information we have if you don't agree go make your own surveys and post your results.
It think it's more to the point that you're polling of 172 unique forum goers (51% of which said they wouldn't buy any extra slots) is skewed since this is just a drop in the bucket of the player base. It's not a fair representation of the mass's opinion. Hell, it's not even a fair representation of the majority of forum goers.
As @Gidorick stated, I commend you for your efforts, but these polls never paint an accurate picture.
You must really love statistics, eh @Faugaun?
Why should I pay for something that should be free? Why is everyone so willing and ready to pay.
Why should I pay for something that should be free? Why is everyone so willing and ready to pay.
Well said.
Additional slots are a P2W mechanism and have no place in a free MMO. As soon the crown shop offers important items or content that a player can not gain by playing, ESO will follow the evil road of milking its customers for things that should be free.
Say NO to additional slots in the crown shop!
I 100% disagree that additional slots are pay to win. I actually can't even fathom why this would even be considered p2w. It's a system function like a name change or server change. It has absolutely no impact on game-play whatsoever.
How are the polls biased? If you have a better poll then by all means let's see it. As for sample size in survey data, I'm working on locating a method for determining confidence and p-value since that is a statistical method I've never explored I don't have an answer I am satisfied with yet. obviously as with any sampling the larger your sample the more accurately it represents the population.
So far I have located a table that indicates a sample size of 110 is adequate to represent a population of 1,000,000 with 90% confidence. If you agree with the chart then a sample of 102 and a sample of 164 may in fact be adequate sample sizes.
The chart was not sourced and frankly I'm not satisfied with the numbers from the chart (Which may be perfectly accurate). I'm still looking for the actual formula which would determine sample size in this instance (without knowing the population size).
For now I will say, if you can get a better survey with a larger sample then by all means let's have it. In the mean time I will continue researching this aspect until I can say further. In any case they are descriptive in nature at the very least and as such they still provide useful information.
VictoriaRachel wrote: »How are the polls biased? If you have a better poll then by all means let's see it. As for sample size in survey data, I'm working on locating a method for determining confidence and p-value since that is a statistical method I've never explored I don't have an answer I am satisfied with yet. obviously as with any sampling the larger your sample the more accurately it represents the population.
To make the poll less biased in future limit it to figures and not opinion. The "I would pay more than $6.25 because I want to support the game and money isn't that important." is CLEARLY your own opinion on paying more than that. It is leading, it is encouraging other people not to vote for it as they do think money is important but it is something they would still pay for it due to other reasons that you are eliminating.
You are sampling a small number of a small sample. You are not sampling a representative cross section of the community, you are only looking at those that use the forum. You are then only sampling a really small number of those users. Basically it not enough to be considered meaningful.So far I have located a table that indicates a sample size of 110 is adequate to represent a population of 1,000,000 with 90% confidence. If you agree with the chart then a sample of 102 and a sample of 164 may in fact be adequate sample sizes.
The chart was not sourced and frankly I'm not satisfied with the numbers from the chart (Which may be perfectly accurate). I'm still looking for the actual formula which would determine sample size in this instance (without knowing the population size).
If it does not have a source I can not see it being worth the bytes needed to show it. We have no idea what that table is talking about, we do not know if it is a reliable source, we do not know what caveats that table comes with. Therefore it is not useful information for us and lets be honest sounds horrifically suspect. Look at the opinion polls in the UK Elections that even far larger polls do not actually give accurate results.For now I will say, if you can get a better survey with a larger sample then by all means let's have it. In the mean time I will continue researching this aspect until I can say further. In any case they are descriptive in nature at the very least and as such they still provide useful information.
I am happy for you to continue to research it is just presenting it as meaningful analysis to which I object.
Why should I pay for something that should be free? Why is everyone so willing and ready to pay.
Well said.
Additional slots are a P2W mechanism and have no place in a free MMO. As soon the crown shop offers important items or content that a player can not gain by playing, ESO will follow the evil road of milking its customers for things that should be free.
Say NO to additional slots in the crown shop!
Sallington wrote: »Anything useful that players are wanting added into the game all fall under the category of "Yer ruinin my 'mersion!"
You didn't read the analysis at all where I specifically detail the representitve sample....and I don't see the $6.25 option as leading since that would be the market cap based on the cost of a second account divided by 8. Anything higher is simply donation to a for profit cooperation (perhaps it would have been more defensible worded slightly differently, but I don't think it is creating a bias, obviously without another poll this cannot be proved one way or the other) .
I think there is a lot more subjectivity to a pole like "what is your favorite fruit" or "politician" than "what price would be the most that you would pay" as such I don't think the UK statement is relevant. The population is much larger, and what i have found so far with surveys is that the larger the underlying population the larger your sample needs to be. Its like comparing apples and oranges, they are both round fruits but once inside they are completely different. In the context of the analysis it is meaningful, again if you read it I clearly articulate that it is relevant to the population that the sample represents, which may be but is not necessarily the same as the entire forum population or the forum population on patch day or the weekend forum population or the whole tamriel population.
Again though if you really wanna refute it please run your own polls and present your findings. I would love to see what results others come up with. Plus with multiple different methods we can pick the best and go from there.